Shop assistant wins unfair constructive dismissal case after being asked to work weekends despite having no childcare

In Ms J Keating v WH Smith Retail Holdings Ltd Jacqueline Keating has 2 children and is a single parent. Her terms and conditions included, under the normal working hours section, a provision that she was to work 20 hours per week, flexible to the needs of the business. It was also stated that the she could be asked to work an extra 8 hours per week where the trading patterns require more staff. Further, that she may be required to work Saturdays, Sundays or Public/Bank Holidays.

In Ms J Keating v WH Smith Retail Holdings Ltd Jacqueline Keating has 2 children and is a single parent. Her terms and conditions included, under the normal working hours section, a provision that she was to work 20 hours per week, flexible to the needs of the business. It was also stated that she could be asked to work an extra 8 hours per week where the trading patterns require more staff. Further, that she may be required to work Saturdays, Sundays or Public/Bank Holidays.

Mr Cruickshank, the manager, identified a business need to introduce a Saturday rota for the weekday staff. The proposal was for the weekday staff to work 1 Saturday in 4. This was because of the operational and budget restraints in the Store caused by falling sales revenue and hence a consequential squeeze on the Store’s budget.

Ms Keating asked not to work at weekends because she did not have any childcare. The hearing in Croydon, south London, was told on numerous occasions that this roster was a ‘massive issue’ for the single mother, who had no family or social network to help her out. But her ‘frustrated’ boss told her she had to work a four hour shift on a Saturday and find her own replacement if she could not do it, an employment tribunal was told. The tribunal was told she tried to talk to her boss multiple times about this, even sending him a text which was ignored.

The following month, Ms Keating was forced to ask for both WHSmith and her boss to sign off on letting her daughter accompany her to work – a move the panel found to be an indication of her ‘obvious and significant childcare issues’.

The tribunal found this should have been a ‘red flag’ to managers but her boss ‘neglected his responsibility’ and did not explore whether any staff could cover for her. Employment Judge Omar Khalil concluded: ‘It appeared… that there was either casualness and/or a lack of HR support for Mr Cruikshank, alternatively inadequacy of diversity training.

‘Mr Cruikshank’s disinterest was rooted in his desire for Ms Keating to sort out swaps with her colleagues or simply to find a child care solution herself.

‘This was a surprising neglect of his responsibility.’

The panel awarded Ms Keating £25,558.55 in compensation.

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Cyber competence the missing KPI in the defence against cyber criminals

19 August 2025

Career Development

19 August 2025

Working in global markets not only promises a desirable competitive advantage for organizations but also a material career boost to leaders who take the plunge...

Career Development

18 August 2025

Nepternship offers a transactional marketplace that acknowledges an uncomfortable truth: career opportunities often flow through personal networks, and pretending otherwise hasn't served students well...

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

Job Purpose We are seeking a proactive and people-focused HR & People Manager to lead all aspects of human resources. This key leadership role is

Act as the local subject matter expert on HRpensation matters, and partner with HR colleagues in providing modelling, guidance and advice onpensation structures across multiple

We are seeking to hire an enthusiastic, passionate and experienced Assistant Director of People and Culture who has hands on experience supporting an HR function

University of Bradford – Directorate of People and CultureSalary: £40,497 to £45,413 per annum Role 1 – 1 FTE September to end of January 2026.

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE